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Density functionals that are one- and two- are not always many-electron self-interaction-free, as shown for H2+, He2+, LiH+, and Ne2+.

Authors :
Ruzsinszky A
Perdew JP
Csonka GI
Vydrov OA
Scuseria GE
Source :
The Journal of chemical physics [J Chem Phys] 2007 Mar 14; Vol. 126 (10), pp. 104102.
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

The common density functionals for the exchange-correlation energy make serious self-interaction errors in the molecular dissociation limit when real or spurious noninteger electron numbers N are found on the dissociation products. An "M-electron self-interaction-free" functional for positive integer M is one that produces a realistic linear variation of total energy with N in the range of M-1<N<or=M, and so can avoid these errors. This desideratum is a natural generalization to all M of the more familiar one of one-electron self-interaction freedom. The intent of this paper is not to advocate for any functional, but to understand what is required for a functional to be M-electron self-interaction-free and thus correct even for highly stretched bonds. The original Perdew-Zunger self-interaction correction (SIC) and our scaled-down variant of it are exactly one- and nearly two-electron self-interaction-free, but only the former is nearly so for atoms with M>2. Thus all these SIC's produce an exact binding energy curve for H2+, and an accurate one for He2+, but only the unscaled Perdew-Zunger SIC produces an accurate one for Ne2+, where there are more than two electrons on each fragment Ne+0.5. We also discuss LiH+, which is relatively free from self-interaction errors. We suggest that the ability of the original and unscaled Perdew-Zunger SIC to be nearly M-electron self-interaction-free for atoms of all M stems in part from its formal resemblance to the Hartree-Fock theory, with which it shares a sum rule on the exchange-correlation hole of an open system.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0021-9606
Volume :
126
Issue :
10
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Journal of chemical physics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
17362056
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1063/1.2566637